(a) Water lifting method.
Lifting water from a source by using a bucket or watering can and pouring it on the crops.
Used widely in market gardens and on farms adjacent to the water.
(b) Flood/basin irrigation.
Diverting river water into a canal then to plots where it‟s flooded.
Commonly used in irrigation schemes.
(c) Sprinkler or overhead irrigation.
Taking water to the fields by pipes and applying it on crops by rotating sprinklers
mounted on vertical pipes.
Used on golf courses and market gardening.
(d) Trickle irrigation.
Plastic pipes with holes laid in the fields through which water trickles to the base of plant.
Popular where fruits and flowers are grown.
(e) Canal irrigation.
Directing water through canal to farms.
Commonly used in areas experiencing low rainfall e.g. Yatta in Machakos
(f) Drip irrigation.
Inverting bottles filled with water into the roots of a plant.
Used in low rainfall areas to grow trees, fruits and flowers.
(g) Drainage of Swamps.
Process of draining excess water from the land.
Problems of land with excess water are:
- Breeding ground for disease causing vectors.
- Water logged and unsuitable for agriculture.
- Prone to flooding which destroys life and property.
Processes Involved in Reducing Exess water
- Digging ditches for water to ooze into and flow away by gravity
- Planting eucalyptus which takes up a lot of water e.g. at Kakuzi in Makuyu.
- Laying perforated pipes in ditches which water will seep into and flow away by gravity.
Areas in Kenya with have been reclaimed by draining are:
- Yala on lower courses of R.Yala
- Bunyala on lower courses of R.Nzoia.
The project was conceived in 1970.